Toward the end of trading Friday, the Dow traded up 0.41 percent to 14,387 while the NASDAQ rose 0.38 percent to 3,244.25. The S&P also rose, gaining 0.43 percent to 1,550.

Index Technicals:
The Dow looks set to stall at 14,400, with lower intraday support around the 14,250 level. Major daily support will be found at 14,100.

The Russell will take out its 932 resistance and head to new highs, with a bullish MACD cross on its daily chart.

The NASDAQ takes out its 3,213.50 intraday resistance and stall out around 3,250.

Finally, the S&P continues its uptrend, stalling at 1,550, while 1,538 should act as intraday support.

Top Headline
Pandora Media (NYSE: P) posted a narrower-than-expected fourth-quarter loss. The company also announced that its Chairman, Chief Executive and President, Joseph Kennedy is stepping down.

The company posted a quarterly loss of $14.6 million, or $0.09 per share, versus a year-ago loss of $8.2 million, or $0.05 per share. Excluding one-time items, its adjusted loss came in at $0.04 per share.

Its revenue surged 54% to $125.1 million. However, analysts were expecting a loss of $0.05 per share on revenue of $122.8 million.

Equities Trading UP
Navistar (NYSE: NAV) jumped 11.38 percent to $35.52 following the open after J.P. Morgan issued an upgrade on the company, adding to its rally's momentum.

Shares of Tempur-Pedic International (NYSE: TPX) got a boost, shooting up 5.47 percent to $44.95 after the Federal Trade Commission cleared its planned acquisition of Sealy.

Euro zone
European shares were higher today as Spanish industrial production continued to improve in January, falling 5 percent on expectations of a 5.2 percent drop and slower than the previous reading of a 6.9 percent drop.

Economics
The US economy added 236,000 jobs in the month of February and the unemployment rate declined to 7.7% from 7.9%. However, economists were expecting the economy to add 160,000 jobs and unemployment rate of 7.9% in February.

US wholesales inventories climbed 1.2% to $504.4 billion in January. However, economists had expected a rise of around 0.3%.